Yes, when heated it loses water to form HPO3 (see Wikipedia).
i dont know the anser
Yes, it is possible.
phosphoric acid
phosphoric acid
H3PO4 is the formula for phosphoric acid, also called orthophosphoric acid. For details see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphoric_acid
Phosphoric acid
Phosphoric acid 85% is the highest purity of this type of acid available in the market. Which is most used in food grade. Phosphoric acid is in the classification of weak acids.
phosphoric acid
I don't think so.poly phosphoric acid and phosphoric acid have same moleculer structure.http://harvestchem.iblogger.org
phosphoric acid
H3PO4 is the formula for phosphoric acid, also called orthophosphoric acid. For details see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphoric_acid
Phosphoric acid
Phosphoric acid 85% is the highest purity of this type of acid available in the market. Which is most used in food grade. Phosphoric acid is in the classification of weak acids.
i think it is phosphoric is stronger but I'm not sure?
They are the same Chemical Formula. Basically the same Acid with two different names.
Bromic Acid Whoever wrote the above is a terrible idiot.... H3PO3 CANNOT be bromic acid as it contains no Bromine (Br on the periodic table) It's common name would be Phosphorous acid If it were H3PO4 it would be Phosphoric acid
what is the amu of phosphoric acid
Don't you mean "Where did Phosphoric Acid come from?"
The rmm of phosphoric acid is 97.976898.